True?
I don't know what you're trying to say here, but I know this is a true statement, so,
Happy studying!
~Mistermistyeyed.
Answer:
Hope this helps:) a
Explanation:
First, the candlestick has 9 candles. It is called a Hanukkiah, though most people call it a manorah. we use this during the holiday, Hanukkah (which starts in 3 days!). one candle is the shamash and we light one for each night of Hanukkah.
The second, the animal horn, is called a Shofar. We blow and make noise with it on Rosh Hashama, this directly translates to "head of the new year". this is the jewish new year. in anchent times, the horn was blown at the crack of dawn to wake a village up and tell them it was a new year.
Last is the fruit. I am not sure which fruit this is but, if it is yellow, it is an etrog. We use this on sukkot. it is kinda like a lemon but more sour. you shake it with the lulav to represent the body, the lulav, and the heart, the etrog. you are not supposed to eat it, though.
I am jewish, just so you know:)
Use of strong diagonal lines
Answer: Option 2.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Edgar Degas was a French craftsman well known for his pastel drawings and oil works of art of ballet dancers. Degas likewise created bronze models, prints, and drawings. Degas is particularly related to the subject of move; the greater part of his works portray artists.
Four Dancers, one of the biggest and generally aggressive of Edgar Degas late works, exists in a few variations that show various types and degrees of change. While Degas smothered engaging point of interest somewhere else in the work of art, decided dull lines shape the heads and arms, underlining the craftsman's proper concerns.